Hoopsville podcast, Feb. 5

I felt pretty good about this show when it was all said and done and I had a pretty good time hosting while Dave was out. Good conversations with coaches whose teams are right there in the heart of conference races, in fact, four of them within a game of first place or leading their league.

Our Thursday night Hoopsville show included:
Guilford men’s coach Tom Palombo
McDaniel men’s coach Kevin Curley
Louisiana College women’s coach Janice Joseph-Richard
John Carroll men’s coach Mike Moran
Oneonta State men’s coach Vince Medici

We also talked more about the East Region with our regional reporter, J.C. DeLass. We covered the Empire 8 and Liberty League in some detail.

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ALERT: Regional rankings released

The first men’s Division III basketball regional rankings was released this afternoon reflecting results through Sunday, February 1. The team is followed by its overall record and then its regional record. We haven’t checked the accuracy of the regional records yet so feel free to raise questions below but remember there are three ways a game can be classified as in region.

The first women’s regional rankings are expected next Wednesday.

Atlantic
1. Richard Stockton 19-2 16-2
2. Farmingdale State 16-2 16-2
3. William Paterson 15-4 15-4
4. Baruch 17-4 15-3
5. Montclair State 15-5 12-5

East
1. Ithaca 17-1 15-1
2. St. Lawrence 13-4 11-4
3. Hamilton 12-5 10-1
4. Rochester 13-5 13-5
5. Rochester Tech 14-4 11-4

Great Lakes
1. Capital 17-2 15-2
2. Carnegie Mellon 14-4 10-3
3. John Carroll 14-4 12-3
4. Calvin 12-6 7-1
5. Hope 14-5 7-2
6. Ohio Northern 14-5 12-4

Middle Atlantic
1. Franklin & Marshall 17-2 16-2
2. Gwynedd-Mercy 15-2 14-1
3. DeSales 16-3 15-3
4. Wesley 12-5 10-1
5. St. Mary’s (Md.) 15-4 12-2
6. McDaniel 14-5 12-4
7. Widener 14-5 12-5
8. Gettysburg 13-5 13-5

Midwest
1. Washington U. 17-1 16-1
2. Elmhurst 15-4 15-4
3. Wheaton (Ill.) 16-3 12-3
4. St. Norbert 16-1 15-1
5. Transylvania 14-4 11-2
6. Augustana 15-5 14-5
7. North Central (Ill.) 13-6 11-4
8. Carroll 13-5 13-5

Northeast
1. Worcester Polytech 16-3 16-2
2. Middlebury 18-2 16-1
3. Mass-Dartmouth 17-2 15-2
4. Elms 17-1 16-1
5. Salem State 15-4 14-4
6. MIT 14-5 13-3
7. Colby 13-5 10-4
8. Rhode Island College 14-4 14-4
9. Amherst 16-3 14-3
10. Bridgewater State 13-5 12-3

South
1. Trinity (Texas) 17-2 14-2
2. Texas-Dallas 17-2 15-2
3. Guilford 15-4 14-4
4. McMurry 13-5 12-3
5. Randolph-Macon 14-5 12-2
6. DePauw 15-5 12-4
7. Centre 15-4 12-4
8. LeTourneau 13-6 12-4

West
1. UW-Stevens Point 17-2 16-2
2. St. Thomas 19-0 18-0
3. UW-Platteville 18-2 13-2
4. Puget Sound 17-2 14-0
5. UW-Whitewater 17-3 16-3
6. Buena Vista 18-2 15-2
7. Whitworth 15-4 13-4
8. Bethel 15-4 13-4

Insider: Halfway to Another Title

The Beavers are over half way through the conference schedule. We are currently 10-1 in conference play. Last Monday we ran across a very hot Wartburg team. Since I have been a part of this program, Buena Vista and Wartburg have had some battles on the basketball court. Unfortunately, we were unable to get things going offensively and had troubles stopping the Knights defensively. We suffered our first loss in the conference and it was really a gut-check time for our program. Like I expected, we took the loss from Wartburg and used it to focus on what we needed to do to be a great basketball team. We called a team meeting and set some goals that we thought would be important in winning our next four games. We focused on rebounding and how we really want to dominate teams on the glass. We also focused on limiting our empty possessions. By empty possessions, and I am talking about not just turning the ball over, but running our plays correctly and taking good shots as well. The final thing we talked about was basically finding our identity as a program. We wanted to point out things we do well and make sure we continue to do those things well. We came back two days after the loss and beat a Luther team that is much better than their record shows. We then continued our streak and beat Simpson on Saturday and COE College on Wednesday.

I am going to take this time to talk about our senior class a little bit. I will talk about Matt Cleveland and Andre Wagner today, and talk about the other seniors later. I am starting off with Matt Cleveland. I have lived with Matt the last two years and I feel like it has made our relationship stronger on the court. Matt is one of a kind. He stands at 6’8”, but can shoot the ball from the outside as good as anyone I have witnessed. Matt also has a great ability of rebounding the basketball. Matt has been named IIAC player of the week this year as well as tournament MVP in California. I feel fortunate that I have been able to play along side of him the last couple of years.

Andre Wagner is our starting point guard. Andre is an outstanding player as well as person. He is involved in many on-campus activities and he dedicates a lot of his time to helping others. He recently spent a month helping children in the area with disciplinary problems, which falls somewhere in his field. He plans to do something in the field of social work and there is no doubt that he will be great at it. He is just as good of a person on the court. When Andre came to Buena Vista he was a scorer. He came from a school where he was the offense. Now he is the leading scorer as well as assists man in the IIAC. He does whatever it takes to make the team better. His dedication to making himself a better player as well as his teammates is greatly appreciated. There is no doubt about that he makes me a better player.

We play at Central this weekend. Since I have been at Buena Vista I have never won a game there. They always seem to play their best against us and we expect nothing else. Next week we have two home games and I plan to keep you updated.

Insider: Road Warriors

It’s only been a few weeks but I feel like I have a lot to write about—so here’s blog #4 from an airplane someplace between Pittsburgh and St. Louis.

Home Weekend: We had two home games last weekend in conference against Case Western and Emory. The UAA is a very different conference than any other in the country because of the geography involved. We play Friday nights and Sunday mornings every weekend–this leads to very different game atmospheres for the two games. Last Friday night we tipped-off at 8 p.m. in front of 1,500 or so Wash U faithful— including about 1,000 students. Sunday morning against Emory, in the same gym, there were maybe 100 people in the stands at 11 a.m. for tip-off–probably four hundred more got there by half time.

It isn’t hard to get fired up to play in front of a crowd like Friday’s—unfortunately Case Western was a little more fired up than we expected. They shot the heck out of the ball in the first half, but we weathered the storm and pulled ahead with great defense in the second half.

Sunday we got off to a great start against Emory and never looked back. Coach Edwards says “UAA championships are won on Sundays” and I really agree with him. The teams that can be ready to play at a.m. and focused on the task at hand win those games.

Taking the road: This past weekend started our rough stretch of four-straight road games. Starting Thursday we were going to be spending six of 10 nights in hotels in Rochester, Pittsburgh, Boston & New York City. Seriously–that’s like an NBA schedule. Playing in the UAA we take for granted the amazing opportunity of being able to pick up and leave school to travel to some the greatest cities in the country—but when you’re on the road like this it gets tough between missing four days of class and not sleeping in your own bed.

The Rochester/Carnegie Mellon trip has not been good to us since I’ve been here. I’ve been lucky enough to be a part of two Final Four teams and another team that JUST missed the tournament—and those teams were a combined 1-5 on this trip, never winning at Rochester. Last year’s national championship team got smacked by CMU, on a Sunday, by 30+ points, so this was a big trip for us since they (UR & CMU) were both 2-1 in conference going into the weekend– with us at 3-0.

On Thursday, we met at our gym at 4:15 a.m. for our travel day from hell—a 6 a.m. flight from St. Louis to Baltimore…another flight Baltimore to Buffalo…and a two hour bus ride from Buffalo to Rochester. Somehow we got enough rest Thursday after our practice for our Friday night game (8:30 pm to 9:30 am sleeping—not bad!). We took advantage of an undermanned Rochester team and never took our foot off the gas—not too many teams win at the Palestra, so even if they were missing the conference’s leading scorer it was still a good win. We took an early bus ride Saturday morning from Rochester to Pittsburgh for a practice at CMU to prepare for our game this morning.

The game today was a big-time battle. Both teams traded punches in the first half and got into some foul trouble. They hit some shots—then we hit some shots and had a seven-point halftime lead. They then cut it to three points early in the second half—but over a two-minute span, we went on a 17-0 (yes, that’s right 17-0!!!) run to put the game to 20. That run was the most fun I’ve had playing basketball in a long, long time. Our defense was clicking, leading to turnovers, leading to fast-breaks, leading to wide open lay-ups and threes–it was just awesome. That run was all we needed and we held on for the win.

Rootin’ for the Women: Another cool thing about the UAA is how close we get with the women’s team. We travel together every weekend, watch every one of their games and go to dinners together on the road. So, just because we beat Rochester on Friday we were all bummed and kinda quiet on the bus to Pittsburgh Saturday a.m. since they lost a tough one that they almost had the night before–we call that a “sad” bus. But, since we both won on Sunday (and UR women lost to Chicago) we’re both now either in or tied for first place in the conference–so now I’m flying on “happy” plane with lots of laughter and–dare I say–flirting.

Notes:
– Congrats to Coach Edwards who was honored at the Baseball writers of Missouri’s banquet last week – you can see him in the background of this picture with some guy named Albert Pujols.

– Congrats to my roomie and best bud Tyler Nading on setting the all-time fouls record at Wash U… we’re all so proud of you!

– Before our Emory game I asked the refs about the trivia question I had last blog–and they were 1,000% sure that once the ball hits the ground it is NO LONGER a FG attempt and wouldn’t count if it were after the buzzer—and that it would be a two if time wasn’t an issue.

–On a personal note–it meant a lot to me that EVERY single guy on the Varsity team came to our team’s JV game on Monday night. When we were freshmen, Tyler and I would be the ONLY one’s that played in the Varsity game (aside from the coaches) to go watch our teammates since it is traditionally on a Varsity day off. It really shows how tight this team is, how the program has evolved and changed in my four years, and how every player on this roster is pulling for everyone else.

–HUGE game for us on Friday night @ Brandeis (4-1 in conference). If we can get a W, everyone else in the UAA will have at least two losses, putting us in good shape since five of our last seven are at home. We want to do damage again in March, but we are hungry for a UAA championship since we didn’t get one last year!

Take care,
Sean

Insider: BVU takes streak to Dubuque

It has been a while since my last blog. A lot has happened with the Buena Vista basketball program since that time. The conference season is in full swing and we are coming off a very intense, one point, overtime, victory over the Central Dutch last night. No matter how skilled the teams are, when Buena Vista and Central play, it is always a battle. The Dutch did a great job and it was one of those games that could have gone either way.

Our program, now 12-1 (4-0 IIAC) took a trip to California over Christmas break. We all had about nine days off from basketball before Christmas. On Christmas night we all came back to Storm Lake, had practice and we were off to Omaha bright and early the next morning. We visited Hollywood Blvd., Universal Studios, and even had a chance to catch a Clippers game in the first two days we were there. I couldn’t tell who was even playing, because we were about 10 rows away from the very last row, but it was a great time. Later on in the week I experienced my first ocean. I had never been to the ocean before so the team took a trip one morning to a beach by Malibu. It doesn’t take much to excite me, but I really enjoyed it.

We went 2-0 in our two games in California. We found ourselves down 7 with about 45 seconds to go in the first game and somehow managed to get the game tied and won it in overtime. Senior Matt Cleveland had the best game of his career as he had 29 points and 12 rebounds. The second game was a battle all the way through. We managed to take a lead late and make free throws to hold on to a 3 point “W.” Andre Wagner was awarded all tournament team. His ability to create his own shot off of the dribble is amazing. I sometimes catch myself just standing there watching him. Matt Cleveland was named MVP of the tournament which was well deserved. He was hands down the best player on the court in both games. His ability to shoot outside as well as down low makes him very hard to guard.

As proven last night every game in the Iowa Conference is going to be a battle. We all know that every team is going to come out and play their best against us. We head to Dubuque on Wednesday to play a very solid Dubuque team. They are having one of their best seasons since I have been around and it is going to be a lot of fun!